Jerry/MT
Elite Member
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2008
- Messages
- 3,140
- Location
- North Idaho-The Palouse
- Tractor
- New Holland TD95D, Ford 4610 & Kubota M4500
Bear in mind that operator's manuals are probably written by a tech writer who has never seen a tractor, much less operated one. Somebody probably told them that the fuel lever should be 1/4 to 1/3 open and that's just what they wrote. Nobody explained to them that once the tractor fires, it is no longer "starting" and then you should use your own judgement the same as during any other operation. Pull the throttle back for the desired rpm. Surely the person who wrote those manuals is also the same mentality as the person who decided that our diesel fuel cans needed to be ventless and have a lever with a special lock so that it is nearly impossible to use without spilling fuel onto the ground and getting only a trickle of fuel when you do it according to instructions.
I set my throttle just off the low idle stop. When my engine starts, it jumps up to about 1200 rpm and then drops back to 800 when cold and bounces around a couple of times before settling at 1000 rpm. By my calculations, since full 540 rpm is about 2600, full 1/4 throttle would be 1400 rpm. I don't know about you, but I couldn't reliably set my throttle and get exactly 1400 rpm 1 time out a 1000. I'm not gonna lose any sleep over it either.![]()
Tech writers get thir instructions from the people who design the engines. Cold starting operation is generally developed via development test or from long experience for the engine type design. Manufacturers don't leave this type of information to the whim of a tech writer when they can have strong implications on warranty issues.
Yes there maybe contradictory info in the manuals but that's usually due to a lack of editorial oversight. The OEM still has liability in the case where they give instructions that cause damage to the machine.